The Gun Show Loop Hole is the open door to National Gun Registration. The Loop Hole Law will be meaningless without a list of all guns and who owns them.
The left knows very well what they are doing. Why would a gun owner and supporter of the 2nd A walk around gun shows deciding who should have a gun? I walk around looking for good buys in firearms.

The Orlando gunshows are almost always the same people with tables. In two buildings are a mix of dealers, and private tables. As stated earlier the private sales do not involve interstate commerce, so no backround check is required. A valid in state drivers license, and you will be asked if you have a felony (like that has not been lied about though). You are not even required to have a bill of sale.

That said, more private tables are calling the NCIS for verification. Not all, just some. At one of the last shows a buddy bought a used Glock 27 and we waited for them to call it in. They were not a dealer.

As for pricing in Florida. Usually my best deals have been at a gun show. The dealers all compete and will drop off the price on the tag. I bought a Ruger Blackhawk for $425 new, and a SR9c for $415 new. Both considerably under the MSRP.

I have been casually looking for a used gun private sale, as I do not believe they dump all of the registration every 72 hours. I think that is the basis of the database they will want if Obummer gets his way.

The Orlando gunshows are almost always the same people with tables. In two buildings are a mix of dealers, and private tables. As stated earlier the private sales do not involve interstate commerce, so no backround check is required. A valid in state drivers license, and you will be asked if you have a felony (like that has not been lied about though). You are not even required to have a bill of sale.

That said, more private tables are calling the NCIS for verification. Not all, just some. At one of the last shows a buddy bought a used Glock 27 and we waited for them to call it in. They were not a dealer.

As for pricing in Florida. Usually my best deals have been at a gun show. The dealers all compete and will drop off the price on the tag. I bought a Ruger Blackhawk for $425 new, and a SR9c for $415 new. Both considerably under the MSRP.

I have been casually looking for a used gun private sale, as I do not believe they dump all of the registration every 72 hours. I think that is the basis of the database they will want if Obummer gets his way.

Beware the Executive Order. He knows what is good for us.

how are private individuals getting access to the NCIS? if i am not mistaken thats not available to the general public.

and there is no registration on a firearm other than the dealers records of the FFL form 4473, which is kept with the gun dealer. when they call in and do a background check to see if you are eligible to purchase a firearm, there is no information about the firearm given. so there is no way they could compile a national registration from it regardless if they didn't dump all the information gathered in 72 hours.

how are private individuals getting access to the NCIS? if i am not mistaken thats not available to the general public.

and there is no registration on a firearm other than the dealers records of the FFL form 4473, which is kept with the gun dealer. when they call in and do a background check to see if you are eligible to purchase a firearm, there is no information about the firearm given. so there is no way they could compile a national registration from it regardless if they didn't dump all the information gathered in 72 hours.

Long gun, pistol, or other is what has been asked when I buy. As for nics for public use, not that I know of.

how are private individuals getting access to the NCIS? if i am not mistaken thats not available to the general public.

After contacting the local police, the state attorney general's office (MS), and the BATF regarding the proper procedure to verify if a firearm is stolen and being told that information is for the police only (and only as allowed by BATF) but could be provided if i could surrender the firearm to the local police station, I find the idea of an individual/non-FFL being able to run a NCIS check HIGHLY, VERY HIGHLY UNLIKELY.

It seems most of the shows these days require that anyone regardless runs the Brady Check. The shows have FFL transfer tables setup and those without FFLs pay a fee to have the BGC run.
The fear of law suits has done what Federal Laws could not do.

Drum- you are right- and IF you have someone that is buying and selling REPEATEDLY without a license, sooner or later the ATF is going to dump on them. About a year ago they nailed an FBI agent that had bought and resold about 50 guns over on Gunbroker.com.

Which is quite interesting to me how Pat Burns has, for years, sold higher end Mosin-Nagant rifles from her web-site, with no FFL. These are all being sold from a "personal collection". I am sure what she is doing is legal, because there is no way to fly under the radar that long. Federal laws can be screwy, I do my best to err on the side of safety when doing any firearm transaction. Who knows, I may be BATF or you may be, you never know for sure, and I have never seen a gun deal good enough to go to jail for.

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"It is better to be too skeptical then too credulous"

After contacting the local police, the state attorney general's office (MS), and the BATF regarding the proper procedure to verify if a firearm is stolen and being told that information is for the police only (and only as allowed by BATF) but could be provided if i could surrender the firearm to the local police station, I find the idea of an individual/non-FFL being able to run a NCIS check HIGHLY, VERY HIGHLY UNLIKELY.

We the people aren't in the club.

In Fl. you go to a state-run website, enter a gun's serial number, and it will come up if it has any problems. It only takes a few seconds, and gives you peace of mind. I always note the date and time, that I do the check, on my firearm inventory as a kind of CYA procedure. If I buy from an FFL, I don't bother as I have documents to verify my legal purchase.

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"It is better to be too skeptical then too credulous"

In Fl. you go to a state-run website, enter a gun's serial number, and it will come up if it has any problems. It only takes a few seconds, and gives you peace of mind. I always note the date and time, that I do the check, on my firearm inventory as a kind of CYA procedure. If I buy from an FFL, I don't bother as I have documents to verify my legal purchase.

Chainfire, that only checks to see if the firearms is stolen or not. doesn't verify the person buying it is legal to purchase.